Yes you were correct. The fogging mysteriously disappeared overnight, even though it was still sandwiched in a plastic report cover/protector.
----- Original Message -----
From: Ender100@aol.com
To: alt-photo-process-l@sask.usask.ca
Sent: Tuesday, February 22, 2005 8:04 PM
Subject: Re: Halo or Fogging at Edge of Digital Negative
Oooops, the cat stomped on the "send" key before I was done. I guess I better
give the cat-a-tonic to calm him down.
I let my negatives "cure" about a couple of hours at least. My usual practice is to print the negatives the day before I make prints. The density range of the negative will drop as it cures.
Mark Nelson
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In a message dated 2/22/05 7:46:23 PM, Ender100@aol.com writes:
This should disappear after about an hour or two—if it's still there the next day I'd
In a message dated 2/22/05 7:41:53 PM, mkochsch@shaw.ca writes:
I'm noticing a halo or translucent fogging at the edges of a digital
negative I just made tonight. It kind of looks like what you get from
breathing on a window on a cold night -- except it's not going away. Is it
common to find this on inkjet negatives? I'm guessing it's some sort of
off-gassing of what? Ammonia? I threw the negative in a report cover very
soon after printing it. Do others let their inkjet negatives "air out"? Thx.
Received on Wed Feb 23 14:27:38 2005
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